Casa Mika

Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar

CASA MIKA

Asp Arquitectura Sergio Portillo

PHOTOS
Cesar Bejar

AREA
5000 Sqft - 10,000 Sqft

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Mexico City, Mexico

CATEGORY
Residential › Private House

Located northwest of the Metropolitan Area of Mexico City. In Casa Mika, matter functions as a binding element throughout the project.

Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar

Through the program we seek to generate dialogues between spaces and their immediate surroundings, between exterior and interior, between solids and voids and, in this way, make one space take you to another through different experiences.

A scheme of two main volumes separates the public and private areas through voids, subtractions and specific openings that give rise to patios, spaces for contemplation, dispersion, or coexistence that are directly related to the interior of the house.

We duplicate the interior space by linking it with its exterior immediately. Most of the materials used in the construction are local: white clay brick, certified woods, apparent concrete and traditional blacksmithing.

Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar

The main entrance, the garage, the living room, the dining room and the kitchen are located in the first block of the residence, on one level, with a discreet volume that faces the street.

The second block is on two levels and consists of a living room, a study and a guest bedroom on the ground floor, while on the upper level there are three bedrooms with views of the back garden and the central patio.

In the center of the house there is an interior corridor that connects the two volumes that make up the house by means of a bridge.

Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar

This works as a transition element, at the same time that it provides transparency and allows access to the patios with abundant vegetation.

A priority during the project was the implementation of passive bioclimatic strategies that favored an accurate management of natural light, as well as acoustic and thermal insulation in the areas that required it to achieve a harmony between functionality, aesthetics and materiality as a whole.

Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar


Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar
Casa Mika
© Cesar Bejar